Spyke
lemmy.world

American here, I just make my own peanut butter in a food processor. The ingredients are: peanuts.

Works for me.

52
piefed.social

I really really don't get why not more people do that. It's like fucken mayonnaise, why buy that shit. Or store bought hollandaise omg I'm fucking throwing up.

9

I think people may not realize how easy it is. Or maybe a food processor isn’t a common item in every household. I only bought one last year, prior to that I was making peanut butter with a hand blender and that was a pain.

11
Swaus01reply
piefed.social

Mayonnaise seems like a faff to make actually, you have to boil eggs and then seperate the white from yolk and then cut it up and put it in a processor, right? That's like 3 things

2
lemmy.world

I assume it preserves like the original peanuts? How often do you take to consume a batch?

1

Yeah, I use roasted peanuts and cashews, and they keep fine. Make peanut and cachew butter in two and a half cup batches in the food processor, which comes out to about half that once made into butter.

I don't know how long it takes to go through, probably a few weeks each. I've never had any go bad.

1
stenAandenreply
feddit.dk

Banned chemicals

Edit: also, I quickly grabbed it off the shelf at LIDL last week when my entire week was busy. I only realized it was American when my knife easily sunk into it this morning.

32

Ok, so hydrogenated fatty acids are the thing, right? More specifically, random trans fats resulting from the hydrogenation process.

7

Its the oils and hfcs. Unless the ingredients are just peanuts and salt it is typically garbage.

Some on the shelf can't even be labeled "peanut butter" because there is so much garbage added.

6

Recall snapple started out as a "healthier" option, which included not having emulsifers etc that kept the juices together. This means it needed shaken before being consumed for optimal flavor.

This was too difficult for the average American consumer so snapple added the emulsifers etc. so people wouldn't need to checks notes shake thier drink before opening.

21
discuss.online

Sure, but the no-stir is no-stir by virtue of a Crisco infusion. Vegetable shortening. White, solid at room temperature, processed fat.

Stir peanut butter is just mashed up peanuts and some salt. It’s glorious.

And it’s straight up monounsaturated fat. Omega 6.

The taste is amazing. I say this as an American. Stir peanut butter is the best peanut butter. Adam’s is the best imo.

16
lemmy.world

Adam’s is the best imo.

yeah have tried a couple of brands and I dig Adams. also find if I invert the jar a few times in the pantry a couple days before opening it's very easy to integrate.

2
JennyLaFaereply
lemmy.blahaj.zone

I keep having this idea that storing the jar on a rock tumbler is going to auto stir my peanut butter, but then if it were that easy why is it not a THING.

I should get a rock tumbler for science.

1

Omega 6 is only good is you've overconsumed Omega 3 and you need more O6 to bring them back to thr ideal ratio.

With the "standard 1st world diet" of today you are very likely overconsuming O6 in the first place.

Either way, still better than Crisco.

2

I agree its better but its a shame that it usually costs quite a bit more. Then if you want to look at other nuts omg the price can climb so high.

1
feddit.org

American peanut butter? My friend, there is only one brand making decent peanut butter:

But I'm out of that, too.

16
bartvblreply
lemmy.world

The peanut butter shop that's in a few towns has one with lemon grass and chilli. I usually bring a few jars home of that one whenever I'm in Holland

6
feddit.uk

The only ingredients that should be in peanut butter is peanuts. Maybe some salt but it's better without.

15
jolreply
discuss.tchncs.de

What about whole pieces of pean- oh never mind you already said penauts.

7
fedia.io

What about that oily thing that gets separated, and mixing it together feels like mixing brown mortar?

7
lemmy.ca

That's peanut oil that separates naturally from the rest of the peanuts.

Stirring it just reminds it that it has a job to do.

16

What about the peanut-colored coloring? Are you gonna say that's peanut too??

2
Airfriedreply
piefed.social

There's peanut butter with chili, fried onions, chocolate and... well I suppose you could just add those ingredients yourself now that I think about it.

3
Airfriedreply
piefed.social

De Pindakaaswinkel in the Netherlands has some wild flavors, including stoopwafel and fried onions.

1

Apparently Europe has all the cool foods, just like Asia, damn

1
lemmy.world

Palm oil. Great at keeping things like peanut butter mixed. Garbage for the environment.

Guess which choice wins most of the time... 😔

14
saturn57reply
lemmy.world

I remember learning back in school that while oil palm trees are relatively bad for the land they take up, their yields are high enough that it balances out. The environments they disrupt are a lot more marketable, which is why I think the public cares about them so much.

1

indonesia is the largest exporter of palm oil, and has been and is clearing old growth rainforests and peatlands for oil palms, which used to be carbon sinks. instead due to deforestation and illegal forest fires they've turned into one of the biggest carbon emitters instead. it's horribly tragic, but yes, oil palms do produce a lot of cooking oil.

7
lemmy.world

If you lick the bottom of a wine cork you've had enough emulsifiers for for 20 jars of american peanut butter.

9
sh.itjust.works

This is the first time I hear of no-stir peanut butter and my first question is what’s the problem with stirring it? Why did someone need to invent a no-stir version in the first place???

7

Consumer lazy, cannot stur butter. Separated butter look ugly, consumer no like. Ooga booga caveman noises.

At least that is my interpretation.

8